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Another Giants' haulGreater Western Sydney again dominate the first round of the national draft. They called the names of Jonathan Patton, Stephen Coniglio, Dom Tyson, Will Hoskin-Elliott and Matt Buntine with picks one to five last year. This time around they've got five of the first 14 selections. How they opt to use picks one, two and three is intriguing. Lachie Whitfield looks set to go No.1, another classy midfielder in Jonathan O'Rourke will probably be No.2, but then it gets interesting. Lachie Plowman could add to their defence, Jimmy Toumpas is another on-baller with great promise, and Troy Menzel is as talented as any of these kids but has had injury issues. Melbourne, with the first non-GWS pick in the draft, will be waiting with a few different plans.

Under the pumpSpeaking of Melbourne, they can't afford to get things wrong at pick No.4. They have already landed a bargain with Jack Viney as a father-son steal at No.27. But here we have a club who have been bombing in the first round for too long. Jordan Gysberts, Cale Morton and Lucas Cook were all top-20 choices who were either sacked or traded last month. That came after Tom Scully walked out just two years after being the No.1 pick.

The Demons have been linked with Ollie Wines, Viney's best mate, and sounds like he'll be a competitive midfielder that will add grunt. If Toumpas is available when it's their turn to choose then they will have a tough call to make.

The Bulldogs boast picks five and six this year. They too have a less than impressive recent record in the early stages of the national draft. Andrejs Everitt (pick 11 in 2006), and Jarrad Grant (pick five in 2007) are failures while the jury is still out on Ayce Cordy (pick 14 in 2008) and Christian Howard (pick 15 in 2009), while Clay Smith (pick 17 in 2011) showed some promise but looks solid, not a star.

The Dogs look to be in the early stages of a rebuild and need to add some genuine class and speed to their blue-collar midfield. Menzel might be there, Jackson Macrae is on their radar, while Wines might win coach Brendan McCartney over. Their dream? O'Rourke is still on the table and they get a star.

How are you feeling?There are a few players in this year's draft pool who have some issues. Nothing too serious hopefully but injury battles or some off-field question marks.

Injury concern ... Jake StringerSource: News Limited

Menzel, as we mentioned, can seriously play but a knee reconstruction has scared a few off. On talent alone he is in the best three players available. But his brother, Geelong youngster Daniel, has also suffered two serious knee injuries. Bad luck or something more worrying?

Jake Stringer is another who has battled bad luck. He snapped his leg badly and missed a lot of footy. He's a powerful midfielder when he is up and running in the Dustin Martin mould. The problem is there's some concerns he won't be back up and running like he used to. Geelong and Collingwood will back their medical teams to get him right if he's still available when they call their first name.

Dayle Garlett is another with talent to burn. If not for some off-field dramas he would be snapped up in the first 15, probably top 10. Again, a strong club like the Magpies will take him if they rate him and try to get him on the straight and narrow.

Second-chance drawThere were three players with AFL experience taken in last year's draft. Beau Wilkes went to St Kilda and Setanta O'hAilpin was given a lifeline by GWS. James McDonald came out of retirement to join Setanta at the Giants.

Ben Jacobs, the first-round pick who walked out on Port Adelaide, is this year's best of the recycled lot. North Melbourne tried their best to get him in the trade period but the Power wouldn't deal on him. Now the Kanagaroos face competition from St Kilda and Essendon for his services.

Of the rest, Kyle Remiers has been linked to Carlton, Dylan Roberton is training at St Kilda, and there's a chance for Liston Medal winner Ben Ross to get another crack on a list.

Pies picking plentyCollingwood are usually having a quiet drink in the corner waiting patiently for their first chance. In the past three drafts their first choice was 50 (Jackson Paine), 45 (Alex Fasolo), and 30 back in 2009 when they grabbed Luke Ball. This year they have three choices in the first round - 18, 19, 21 - and can pick for the part of the ground that needs their attention.

With Chris Tarrant retiring and Ben Reid and Nathan Brown facing injury issues, they may go for a tall back first up. Tom Clurey is an option.

Another tall option in attack with time to develop would be handy. Tim O'Brien, a South Australian lad likened to Matthew Pavlich, sounds perfect.

They could then inject some run and excitement to their list by nabbing Dayle Garlett. Sounds like a good mix for the Magpies.

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